Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up
All Scores
Odds by

Rotoworld

  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Personalize your Rotoworld feed by favoriting players
    Raiders waived WR Greg Little.
    Little went into the final preseason game needing a big performance to beat out Brice Butler or Andre Holmes. He instead flopped, catching two passes for 10 yards and getting thrown at on an interception. Little, one of the bigger busts of the 2011 draft, has now been waived by two teams in the last four months.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Raiders claimed WR Greg Little off waivers from the Browns.
    The 2011 second-rounder didn’t make it past many teams on waivers. It’s not surprising considering his draft pedigree and affordable $753,750 salary, but Little won’t be assured of a roster spot for a team with a crowded, if unsettled, receiver corps. Little has been a massive disappointment despite ideal measurables (6-foot-2, 220 pounds, 4.51 speed), catching just 155 passes in three years while struggling with drops and mental mistakes. Little remains off the fantasy radar.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Greg Little caught one pass for six yards in Friday’s preseason game against the Packers.
    Little was Oakland’s No. 4 receiver behind James Jones, Rod Streater and Denarius Moore. He got a few first-team reps on Friday, but predictably did very little with them. Through three preseason games, Little has three catches for 54 yards.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Greg Little caught three passes for 24 yards in Sunday’s win over the Dolphins.
    For all the talk of expanding Little’s receiving involvement, it’s not happening yet. He didn’t get a single catch until there was 3:24 left. Josh Cribbs is still getting snaps in two-wide sets and Brian Robiskie is mixing in at times in three-wide sets. Little remains a mere bench stash in deeper formats as Colt McCoy spreads the ball around in his game-manager style.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    The Browns spent a “big chunk” of their bye week “trying to figure out how to jump-start” their West Coast offense, according to the Associated Press.
    As the AP points out, getting the ball to Greg Little is the obvious solution. He’s the Browns’ best playmaker with after-the-catch skills that perfectly suit the West Coast scheme. Little’s target count is on the rise as he saw three passes come his way Week 1, five in Weeks 2 and 3 and eight in Week 4.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Browns coach Pat Shurmur has promoted Greg Little into the starting lineup at X receiver, and he’ll move to the slot in three-wide sets.
    He’ll be a true every-down receiver. Brian Robiskie was the old nominal starter at X, across from Mohamed Massaquoi, before the Browns’ bye. After spending the last week trying to kick-start their passing game, the Browns have properly determined that getting Little heavily involved is an answer. Little instantly becomes the receiver to own in Cleveland and an upside play in PPR formats. He racked up six catches on eight targets in Week 4 and has flashed elite playmaking skills after the catch.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Coach Pat Shurmur complimented Greg Little following the rookie’s first game as a starter.
    Little came within a fluky slip of a touchdown and posted six catches for a season-high 72 yards. “I still think he can play a lot, lot better than he did,” Shurmur said. Little, Mohamed Massaquoi and Josh Cribbs will be the Browns’ top three wideouts going forward. Little has serious upside as Colt McCoy’s favorite target and the player most likely to make a difference after the catch.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Greg Little caught four passes for 28 yards in the Browns’ Week 8 loss to San Francisco.
    He was targeted a club-high 11 times, but Colt McCoy’s inability to connect when Little was lined up outside hurt the game totals, and Little generated scant yardage after the catch. For the season, Little is averaging well under 10 yards per reception. He’s just a low-end WR3 heading into Week 9 at Houston.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Greg Little caught four passes for 40 yards in the Browns’ Week 16 loss to the Ravens.
    It was a typical day at the office for Little. He tied for the team lead in targets, but had little to show for it because he struggles in the way of yards per reception. Most of Little’s catches occur around the line of scrimmage with a high volume of defenders in the area. He’ll wrap up his rookie season against a tough Steelers pass defense in Week 17.
  • FA Wide Receiver #18
    Greg Little was held without a catch in Cleveland’s Week 17 loss to the Steelers.
    Little struggled against good defenses this year and managed just two touchdowns despite leading the Browns in targets. Cleveland is rumored to be interested in adding another receiver this offseason, but Little is an ascending player with considerable upside. He averaged 59 receiving yards per game since taking over as a starter in Week 4.